In "Giving Birth in Canada," the first historical study of
childbirth in Canada, Wendy Mitchinson has written a fascinating
account of childbirth rituals in the first half of the twentieth
century. Thorough and comprehensive, the work is based on a rich
variety of sources, including medical textbooks, the medical
periodical press, popular medical advice books, literature
published in women's magazines, patient records, and interviews
with women who gave birth and physicians who practiced during the
period.
Mitchinson follows the birthing experience, from the initial
diagnosis of pregnancy, through prenatal care, childbirth - who was
present, and where it took place - to obstetrical intervention,
postnatal care and the definition of what constituted a normal
birth, much of which changed significantly through those years. She
explores physicians' responses to the needs of pregnant women,
developments in medical practices, and the increasing
medicalization of childbirth.
While the book focuses on conventional medical practices, the
author's survey of midwifery and Aboriginal birthing practices
provides a counterpoint to the approach taken by western medicine
and permits valuable discussion about the dynamics of gender and
race as they relate to childbirth and, more broadly, to early
twentieth-century Canada.
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